Real Tennis 01 - 3 sizes, $2,600-$10,000
British artist Elliott Wilcox is a contemporary photographer known for his minimalist, abstract images that explore the relationship between architecture, surface, and space. Working primarily with chromogenic prints, Wilcox captures fragments of built environments: tennis courts, walls, and recreational structures, transforming them into carefully composed studies of colour, geometry, and texture.
Wilcox studied MA Photographic Studies at the University of Westminster, where he developed a conceptual approach to photography grounded in observation and reduction. Rather than documenting architecture in a traditional sense, Wilcox’s photographs function as visual meditations on form. Cropped perspectives, flattened planes, and subtle tonal shifts transform familiar environments into images that feel both painterly and minimal. His compositions often blur the line between photography and abstraction, emphasizing rhythm and repetition.
Sport and leisure spaces – particularly tennis and squash courts – have become recurring subjects in his practice. Through these environments, Wilcox explores themes of human presence and activity without directly depicting the figure, allowing traces of use, texture, and colour to suggest narrative and atmosphere.
Since emerging on the international stage, Wilcox has received significant recognition, including the Discovery of the Year award at the International Photography Awards and honours from the Nikon Discovery Awards and New York Photo Awards. His work gained early attention from collector Charles Saatchi through the BBC series School of Saatchi, helping establish his presence within contemporary photography.
Wilcox has exhibited widely in the UK, Europe, and North America, with solo exhibitions in Toronto, Vancouver, and Los Angeles. His photographs are held in private and corporate collections, and continue to appeal to collectors drawn to contemporary photography that combines minimalism, abstraction, and architectural subject matter.
Photographs are printed and mounted in Toronto using archival materials, and are framed in black or white; frames measure 0.5 inches wide and 1 inch deep.







